Classical ecological theory predicts that environmental stochasticity
increases extinction risk by reducing the average per-capita growth rate of
populations. To understand the interactive effects of environmental
stochasticity, spatial heterogeneity, and dispersal on population growth, we
study the following model for population abundances in n patches: the
conditional law of Xt+dt given Xt=x is such that when dt is small the
conditional mean of Xt+dti−Xti is approximately [xiμi+∑j(xjDji−xiDij)]dt, where Xti and μi are the abundance and per
capita growth rate in the i-th patch respectivly, and Dij is the
dispersal rate from the i-th to the j-th patch, and the conditional
covariance of Xt+dti−Xti and Xt+dtj−Xtj is approximately xixjσijdt. We show for such a spatially extended population that if
St=(Xt1+...+Xtn) is the total population abundance, then Yt=Xt/St,
the vector of patch proportions, converges in law to a random vector Y∞
as t→∞, and the stochastic growth rate limt→∞t−1logSt equals the space-time average per-capita growth rate
\sum_i\mu_i\E[Y_\infty^i] experienced by the population minus half of the
space-time average temporal variation \E[\sum_{i,j}\sigma_{ij}Y_\infty^i
Y_\infty^j] experienced by the population. We derive analytic results for the
law of Y∞, find which choice of the dispersal mechanism D produces an
optimal stochastic growth rate for a freely dispersing population, and
investigate the effect on the stochastic growth rate of constraints on
dispersal rates. Our results provide fundamental insights into "ideal free"
movement in the face of uncertainty, the persistence of coupled sink
populations, the evolution of dispersal rates, and the single large or several
small (SLOSS) debate in conservation biology.Comment: 47 pages, 4 figure